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Machine Learning for Image Based Motion Capture

Image based motion capture is a problem that has recently gained a lot of attention in the domain of understanding human motion in computer vision. The problem involves estimating the 3D configurations of a human body from a set of images and has applications that include human computer interaction, smart surveillance, video analysis and animation. This thesis takes a machine learning based approach to reconstructing 3D pose and motion from monocular images or video. It makes use of a collection of images and motion capture data to derive mathematical models that allow the recovery of full body configurations directly from image features. The approach is completely data-driven and avoids the use of a human body model. This makes the inference extremely fast. We formulate a class of regression based methods to distill a large training database of motion capture and image data into a compact model that generalizes to predicting pose from new images. The methods rely on using appropriately developed robust image descriptors, learning dynamical models of human motion, and kernelizing the input within a sparse regression framework. Firstly, it is shown how pose can effectively and efficiently be recovered from image silhouettes that are extracted using background subtraction. We exploit sparseness properties of the relevance vector machine for improved generalization and efficiency, and make use of a mixture of regressors for probabilistically handling ambiguities that are present in monocular silhouette based 3D reconstruction. The methods developed enable pose reconstruction from single images as well as tracking motion in video sequences. Secondly, the framework is extended to recover 3D pose from cluttered images by introducing a suitable image encoding that is resistant to changes in background. We show that non-negative matrix factorization can be used to suppress background features and allow the regression to selectively cue on features from the foreground human body. Finally, we study image encoding methods in a broader context and present a novel multi-level image encoding framework called ‘hyperfeatures' that proves to be effective for object recognition and image classification tasks.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:CCSD/oai:tel.archives-ouvertes.fr:tel-00390301
Date26 April 2006
CreatorsAgarwal, Ankur
Source SetsCCSD theses-EN-ligne, France
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypePhD thesis

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